SS Königin Luise (1913)

Coordinates: 51°52′00″N 2°30′00″E / 51.8667°N 2.5000°E / 51.8667; 2.5000
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
History
NameSS Königin Luise
OperatorHamburg America Line
BuilderAG Vulcan Stettin
Laid down1913
Launched8 May 1913
AcquiredTaken over by the
Kaiserliche Marine
on 3 August 1914
FateSunk on 5 August 1914
General characteristics
Class and typeSteam ferry
Tonnage2,150 tones
Length310 ft (94 m)
Beam40 ft (12 m)
Draught11 ft (3.4 m)
Propulsion6500 shp
Speed20 knots (37 km/h)
Armament
  • 2 × revolver cannons
  • 200 × mines

SS Königin Luise was a German steam

First World War. She was used as an auxiliary minelayer before being sunk on 5 August 1914.[1]

Construction and early career

Königin Luise was laid down at AG Vulcan Stettin in 1913, and launched on 8 May 1913 for service with the Hamburg America Line. After serving for some time as a ferry, she was requisitioned by the Kaiserliche Marine on 3 August 1914 to serve as an auxiliary minelayer, carrying 200 naval mines.[1] She was fitted with two revolver cannons, and there were plans to fit her with two 88 mm guns, but the British entry to the war on 4 August led to the navy pressing Königin Luise into immediate action.[1] She was disguised in the black, buff, and yellow colours of the steamers of the Great Eastern Railway that sailed between Harwich and the Hook of Holland, and sailed from Emden on the night of 4 August. Her captain, Commander Biermann, had orders to lay mines off the Thames Estuary.[2]

Minelaying and encounter with the British

Königin Luise was able to lay a number of mines off the coast during the night, but was sighted by a number of fishing vessels. The light cruiser Amphion of the Harwich Force and a number of destroyers of the 3rd Flotilla sailed early in the morning of 5 August and headed towards Heligoland Bight.[2] On the way they encountered a fishing boat, whose occupants informed the British force that they had seen an unknown ship "throwing things over the side" about 20 nautical miles (37 km; 23 mi) north of the Outer Gabbard.[2] Amphion and the destroyers set off to investigate.

The taskforce spotted Königin Luise at 10:25, and the destroyers

port and sank at 12:22. 46 of the 100 crew were rescued by the British ships. She was the first German naval loss of the war.[2][3]

Loss of Amphion

The British ships continued their patrol, before heading back to port that evening. Their course took them through the minefield Königin Luise had previously laid, and at 06:45 on the morning of 6 August Amphion struck one of the mines.[2] Heavily damaged, she was abandoned, with her crew being taken off by the escorting destroyers. Amphion drifted back into the minefield, struck another mine at 07:03 and sank, becoming the first British naval war loss, with those killed being the first British casualties of the war.[2][4] Nineteen of the 21 German POWs died on the Amphion when she sank plus one German POW killed on HMS Lark also lost by misadventure because of an Amphion shell.[5]

Notes

References

51°52′00″N 2°30′00″E / 51.8667°N 2.5000°E / 51.8667; 2.5000